Pantheon, Rome


Pantheon

Pantheon
Location Regione IX Circus Flaminius
Built in 126 AD
Built by/for Publius Aelius Hadrianus
Type of structure Roman temple
Related articles Marcus Vipsanius Agrippa, Hadrian, Apollodorus of Damascus

Pantheon.

The Pantheon ( /ˈpænθən/ or US /ˈpænθɒn/;[1] Latin: Pantheon,[nb 1] from Greek: Πάνθειον, an adjective meaning "to every god") is a building in Rome, Italy, commissioned by Marcus Agrippa as a temple to all the gods of Ancient Rome, and rebuilt by Emperor Hadrian in about 126 AD.[2] The ancient Roman writer Cassius Dio speculated that the name comes either from the statues of so many gods placed around this building or from the resemblance of the dome to the heavens.[3] Since the French Revolution, when the church of Sainte-Geneviève in Paris, France was deconsecrated and turned into the secular monument called the Panthéon of Paris, the generic term pantheon has sometimes been applied to other buildings in which illustrious dead are honored or buried.[1]

The building is circular with a portico of three ranks of huge granite Corinthian columns (eight in the first rank and two groups of four behind) under a pediment. A rectangular vestibule links the porch to the rotunda, which is under a coffered, concrete dome, with a central opening (oculus) to the sky. Almost two thousand years after it was built, the Pantheon's dome is still the world's largest unreinforced concrete dome.[4] The height to the oculus and the diameter of the interior circle are the same, 43.3 metres (142 ft).[5] It is one of the best preserved of all Roman buildings. It has been in continuous use throughout its history, and since the 7th century, the Pantheon has been used as a Roman Catholic church dedicated to "St. Mary and the Martyrs" but informally known as "Santa Maria Rotonda."[6] The square in front of the Pantheon is called Piazza della Rotonda.

Contents

History

Ancient

In the aftermath of the Battle of Actium (31 BC), Marcus Agrippa built and dedicated the original Pantheon during his third consulship (27 BC).[7] Located in the Campus Martius, at the time of its construction, the area of the Pantheon was on the outskirts of Rome, and the area had a rural appearance. Under the Roman Republic the Campus Martius had served as a gathering place for elections and the army. However, under Augustus and the new Principate both institutions were deemed to be unnecessary within the city.[8][9]

The construction of the Pantheon was part of a program of construction that was undertaken by Augustus Caesar and his supporters. They built more than twenty structures on the Campus Martius, including the Baths of Agrippa and the Saepta Julia.[10] It had long been thought that the current building was built by Agrippa, with later alterations undertaken, and this was in part because of the inscription on the front of the temple.[11] The inscription across the front of the Pantheon says, M.AGRIPPA.L.F.COS.TERTIUM.FECIT, meaning "Marcus Agrippa, son of Lucius, having been consul three times, built it."[12] However, archaeological excavations have shown that the Pantheon of Agrippa had been completely destroyed, and Emperor Hadrian was responsible for rebuilding the Pantheon on the site of Agrippa's original temple.[13] There had been two earlier buildings on the same spot, for which the new Pantheon was a replacement.[14]

The form of Agrippa's Pantheon is debated.[7] As a result of excavations in the late 19th century, archaeologist Rodolfo Lanciani concluded that Agrippa's Pantheon was oriented so that it faced south, in contrast with the current layout that faces northwards, and that it had a shortened T-shaped plan with the entrance at the base of the "T". This description was widely accepted until the late 20th century. However, more recent archaeological diggings suggest that the building might have taken a different form. Agrippa's Pantheon might have had a circular form with a triangular porch, and it might have also faced north, much like the later rebuildings.[15]

The Augustan Pantheon was destroyed along with other buildings in a huge fire in 80 AD. Domitian rebuilt the Pantheon, which burned again in 110 AD.[16] Not long after the second fire, construction started again, according to a recent re-evaluation of the bricks dated with manufacturer stamps.[17] Therefore, the design of the building should not be credited to Hadrian or his architects. Instead, the design of the existent building might belong to Trajan's architect Apollodorus of Damascus.[17] The degree to which the decorative scheme should be credited to Hadrian's architects is uncertain. Finished by Hadrian but not claimed as one of his works, it used the text of the original inscription on the new facade (a common practice in Hadrian's rebuilding projects all over Rome; the only building on which Hadrian put his own name was the Temple to the Deified Trajan).[12] How the building was actually used is not known.

Cassius Dio, a Graeco-Roman senator, consul and author of a comprehensive History of Rome, writing approximately 75 years after the Pantheon's reconstruction, mistakenly attributed the domed building to Agrippa rather than Hadrian. Dio appears to be the only near contemporaneous writer to mention the Pantheon. Even by the year 200, there was uncertainty about the origin of the building and its purpose:

Agrippa finished the construction of the building called the Pantheon. It has this name, perhaps because it received among the images which decorated it the statues of many gods, including Mars and Venus; but my own opinion of the name is that, because of its vaulted roof, it resembles the heavens.
—Cassius Dio History of Rome 53.27.2

The building was repaired by Septimius Severus and Caracalla in 202 AD, for which there is another, smaller inscription. This inscription reads "pantheum vetustate corruptum cum omni cultu restituerunt" ('with every refinement they restored the Pantheon worn by age').

Medieval

In 609, the Byzantine emperor Phocas gave the building to Pope Boniface IV, who converted it into a Christian church and consecrated it to Sancta Maria ad Martyres, now known as Santa Maria dei Martiri: "Another Pope, Boniface, asked the same [Emperor Phocas, in Constantinople] to order that in the old temple called the Pantheon, after the pagan filth was removed, a church should be made, to the holy virgin Mary and all the martyrs, so that the commemoration of the saints would take place henceforth where not gods but demons were formerly worshiped."[18]

The building's consecration as a church saved it from the abandonment, destruction, and the worst of the spoliation that befell the majority of ancient Rome's buildings during the early medieval period. Paul the Deacon records the spoliation of the building by the Emperor Constans II, who visited Rome in July 663:

Remaining at Rome twelve days he pulled down everything that in ancient times had been made of metal for the ornament of the city, to such an extent that he even stripped off the roof of the church [of the blessed Mary], which at one time was called the Pantheon, and had been founded in honour of all the gods and was now by the consent of the former rulers the place of all the martyrs; and he took away from there the bronze tiles and sent them with all the other ornaments to Constantinople.

Much fine external marble has been removed over the centuries, and there are capitals from some of the pilasters in the British Museum. Two columns were swallowed up in the medieval buildings that abutted the Pantheon on the east and were lost. In the early seventeenth century, Urban VIII Barberini tore away the bronze ceiling of the portico, and replaced the medieval campanile with the famous twin towers (often wrongly attributed to Bernini[19]) called "the ass's ears,"[20] which were not removed until the late nineteenth century.[21] The only other loss has been the external sculptures, which adorned the pediment above Agrippa's inscription. The marble interior has largely survived, although with extensive restoration.

Renaissance

Since the Renaissance the Pantheon has been used as a tomb. Among those buried there are the painters Raphael and Annibale Carracci, the composer Arcangelo Corelli, and the architect Baldassare Peruzzi. In the 15th century, the Pantheon was adorned with paintings: The best-known is the Annunciation by Melozzo da Forlì. Architects, like Brunelleschi, who used the Pantheon as help when designing the Cathedral of Florence's dome, looked to the Pantheon as inspiration for their works.

Pope Urban VIII (1623 to 1644) ordered the bronze ceiling of the Pantheon's portico melted down. Most of the bronze was used to make bombards for the fortification of Castel Sant'Angelo, with the remaining amount used by the Apostolic Camera for various other works. It is also said that the bronze was used by Bernini in creating his famous baldachin above the high altar of St. Peter's Basilica, but, according to at least one expert, the Pope's accounts state that about 90% of the bronze was used for the cannon, and that the bronze for the baldachin came from Venice.[23] This led the Roman satirical figure Pasquino to issue the famous proverb: Quod non fecerunt barbari fecerunt Barberini ("What the barbarians did not do the Barberini [Urban VIII's family name] did").

In 1747, the broad frieze below the dome with its false windows was “restored,” but bore little resemblance to the original. In the early decades of the twentieth century, a piece of the original, as could be reconstructed from Renaissance drawings and paintings, was recreated in one of the panels.

Modern

Two kings of Italy are buried in the Pantheon: Vittorio Emanuele II and Umberto I, as well as Umberto's Queen, Margherita. Although Italy has been a republic since 1946, volunteer members of Italian monarchist organisations maintain a vigil over the royal tombs in the Pantheon. This has aroused protests from time to time from republicans, but the Catholic authorities allow the practice to continue, although the Italian Ministry of Cultural Heritage is in charge of the security and maintenance.

The Pantheon is still used as a church. Masses are celebrated there, in particular on important Catholic days of obligation and weddings.

Structure

Portico

The building was originally approached by a flight of steps. The ground level in the surrounding area has risen considerably since antiquity.[6]

The pediment was decorated with relief sculpture, probably of gilded bronze. Holes marking the location of clamps that held the sculpture suggest that its design was likely an eagle within a wreath; ribbons extended from the wreath into the corners of the pediment.[24]

It took 732 construction workers over 3 years to construct the Pantheon because of its many features. The Pantheon’s porch was originally designed for monolithic granite columns with shafts 50 Roman feet tall (weighing about 100 tons) and capitals 10 Roman feet tall in the Corinthian style.[25] The taller porch would have hidden the second pediment visible on the intermediate block. Instead, the builders made many awkward adjustments in order to use shafts 40 Roman feet tall and capitals eight Roman feet tall.[26] This substitution was probably a result of logistical difficulties at some stage in the construction. The grey granite columns that were actually used in the Pantheon's pronaos were quarried in Egypt at Mons Claudianus in the eastern mountains. Each was 39 feet (12 m) tall, five feet (1.5 m) in diameter, and 60 tons in weight.[27] These were dragged more than 100 km from the quarry to the river on wooden sledges. They were floated by barge down the Nile River when the water level was high during the spring floods, and then transferred to vessels to cross the Mediterranean Sea to the Roman port of Ostia. There, they were transferred back onto barges and pulled up the Tiber River to Rome.[28]

After being unloaded near the Mausoleum of Augustus, the site of the Pantheon was still about 700 meters away.[29] Thus, it was necessary to either drag them or to move them on rollers to the construction site.

In the walls at the back of the Pantheon's portico are niches, perhaps intended for statues of Julius Caesar, Augustus Caesar, and Agrippa, or for the Capitoline Triad, or another set of gods.

The large bronze doors to the cella, once plated with gold, are ancient but not the original ones of the Pantheon. The current doors – manufactured too small for the door frames – have been there since about the 15th century.[30]

Rotunda

The 4,535 metric tons (4,999 short tons) weight of the Roman concrete dome is concentrated on a ring of voussoirs 9.1 metres (30 ft) in diameter that form the oculus, while the downward thrust of the dome is carried by eight barrel vaults in the 6.4 metres (21 ft) thick drum wall into eight piers. The thickness of the dome varies from 6.4 metres (21 ft) at the base of the dome to 1.2 metres (3.9 ft) around the oculus. No tensile test results are available on the concrete used in the Pantheon; however, Cowan discussed tests on ancient concrete from Roman ruins in Libya, which gave a compressive strength of 2.8 ksi (20 MPa). An empirical relationship gives a tensile strength of 213 psi (1.47 MPa) for this specimen.[31] Finite element analysis of the structure by Mark and Hutchison[32] found a maximum tensile stress of only 18.5 psi (0.128 MPa) at the point where the dome joins the raised outer wall.[33] The stresses in the dome were found to be substantially reduced by the use of successively less dense aggregate stones in higher layers of the dome. Mark and Hutchison estimated that, if normal weight concrete had been used throughout, the stresses in the arch would have been some 80% greater. Hidden chambers engineered within the rotunda form a sophisticated honeycomb structure.[34] This reduced the weight of the roof, as did the elimination of the apex by means of the oculus.

The top of the rotunda wall features a series of brick relieving arches, visible on the outside and built into the mass of the brickwork. The Pantheon is full of such devices – for example, there are relieving arches over the recesses inside – but all these arches were hidden by marble facing on the interior and possibly by stone revetment or stucco on the exterior.

The height to the oculus and the diameter of the interior circle are the same, 43.3 metres (142 ft), so the whole interior would fit exactly within a cube (also, the interior could house a sphere 43.3 metres (142 ft) in diameter).[35] These dimensions make more sense when expressed in ancient Roman units of measurement: The dome spans 150 Roman feet; the oculus is 30 Roman feet in diameter; the doorway is 40 Roman feet high.[36] The Pantheon still holds the record for the world's largest unreinforced concrete dome. It is also substantially larger than earlier domes.[37]

Though often drawn as a free-standing building, there was a building at its rear into which it abutted. While this building helped buttress the rotunda, there was no interior passage from one to the other.[38]

Interior

The interior of the dome was possibly intended to symbolize the arched vault of the heavens.[35] The oculus at the dome's apex and the entry door are the only sources of light in the interior. Throughout the day, the light from the oculus moves around this space in a sort of reverse sundial effect.[39] The oculus also serves as a cooling and ventilation method. During storms, a drainage system below the floor handles the rain that falls through the oculus.

The dome features sunken panels (coffers), in five rings of twenty-eight. This evenly spaced layout was difficult to achieve and, it is presumed, had symbolic meaning, either numerical, geometric, or lunar.[40][41] In antiquity, the coffers may have contained bronze stars, rosettes, or other ornaments.

Circles and squares form the unifying theme of the interior design. The checkerboard floor pattern contrasts with the concentric circles of square coffers in the dome. Each zone of the interior, from floor to ceiling, is subdivided according to a different scheme. As a result, the interior decorative zones do not line up. The overall effect is immediate viewer orientation according to the major axis of the building, even though the cylindrical space topped by a hemispherical dome is inherently ambiguous. This discordance has not always been appreciated, and the attic level was redone according to Neoclassical taste in the 18th century.[42]

360 Degree view of the interior of the Pantheon.

Christian modifications

Church of St. Mary and the Martyrs
Chiesa Santa Maria dei Martiri
Sancta Maria ad Martyres
Basic information
Location Rome, Italy
Affiliation Roman Catholic
Year consecrated 609
Ecclesiastical or organizational status Minor basilica, Rectory church
Leadership Msgr. Daniele Micheletti
Website Official website
Architectural description
Architectural style Roman
Direction of façade North
Completed 126 AD
Specifications
Length 84 metres (276 ft)
Width 58 metres (190 ft)
Height (max) 58 metres (190 ft)

The present high altars and the apses were commissioned by Pope Clement XI (1700–1721) and designed by Alessandro Specchi. In the apse, a copy of a Byzantine icon of the Madonna is enshrined. The original, now in the Chapel of the Canons in the Vatican, has been dated to the 13th century, although tradition claims that it is much older. The choir was added in 1840, and was designed by Luigi Poletti.

The first niche to the right of the entrance holds a Madonna of the Girdle and St Nicholas of Bari (1686) painted by an unknown artist. The first chapel on the right, the Chapel of the Annunciation, has a fresco of the Annunciation attributed to Melozzo da Forlì. On the left side is a canvas by Clement Maioli of St Lawrence and St Agnes (1645–1650). On the right wall is the Incredulity of St Thomas (1633) by Pietro Paolo Bonzi.

The second niche has a 15th-century fresco of the Tuscan school, depicting the Coronation of the Virgin. In the second chapel is the tomb of King Victor Emmanuel II (died 1878). It was originally dedicated to the Holy Spirit. A competition was held to decide which architect should design it. Giuseppe Sacconi participated, but lost – he would later design the tomb of Umberto I in the opposite chapel. Manfredio Manfredi won the competition, and started work in 1885. The tomb consists of a large bronze plaque surmounted by a Roman eagle and the arms of the house of Savoy. The golden lamp above the tomb burns in honor of Victor Emmanuel III, who died in exile in 1947.

The third niche has a sculpture by Il Lorenzone of St Anne and the Blessed Virgin. In the third chapel is a 15th-century painting of the Umbrian school, The Madonna of Mercy between St Francis and St John the Baptist. It is also known as the Madonna of the Railing, because it originally hung in the niche on the left-hand side of the portico, where it was protected by a railing. It was moved to the Chapel of the Annunciation, and then to its present position sometime after 1837. The bronze epigram commemorated Pope Clement XI's restoration of the sanctuary. On the right wall is the canvas Emperor Phocas presenting the Pantheon to Pope Boniface IV (1750) by an unknown. There are three memorial plaques in the floor, one conmmemorating a Gismonda written in the vernacular. The final niche on the right side has a statue of St. Anastasio (1725) by Bernardino Cametti.[43]

On the first niche to the left of the entrance is an Assumption (1638) by Andrea Camassei. The first chapel on the left, is the Chapel of St Joseph in the Holy Land, and is the chapel of the Confraternity of the Virtuosi at the Pantheon. This refers to the confraternity of artists and musicians that was formed here by a 16th-century Canon of the church, Desiderio da Segni, to ensure that worship was maintained in the chapel. The first members were, among others, Antonio da Sangallo the younger, Jacopo Meneghino, Giovanni Mangone, Zuccari, Domenico Beccafumi, and Flaminio Vacca. The confraternity continued to draw members from the elite of Rome's artists and architects, and among later members we find Bernini, Cortona, Algardi, and many others. The institution still exists, and is now called the Academia Ponteficia di Belle Arti (The Pontifical Academy of Fine Arts), based in the palace of the Cancelleria. The altar in the chapel is covered with false marble. On the altar is a statue of St Joseph and the Holy Child by Vincenzo de Rossi. To the sides are paintings (1661) by Francesco Cozza, one of the Virtuosi: Adoration of the Shepherds on left side and Adoration of the Magi on right. The stucco relief on the left, Dream of St Joseph, is by Paolo Benaglia, and the one on the right, Rest during the flight from Egypt, is by Carlo Monaldi. On the vault are several 17th-century canvases, from left to right: Cumean Sibyl by Ludovico Gimignani; Moses by Francesco Rosa; Eternal Father by Giovanni Peruzzini; David by Luigi Garzi; and Eritrean Sibyl by Giovanni Andrea Carlone.

The second niche has a statue of St Agnes, by Vincenco Felici. The bust on the left is a portrait of Baldassare Peruzzi, derived from a plaster portrait by Giovanni Duprè. The tomb of King Umberto I and his wife Margherita di Savoia is in the next chapel. The chapel was originally dedicated to St Michael the Archangel, and then to St. Thomas the Apostle. The present design is by Giuseppe Sacconi, completed after his death by his pupil Guido Cirilli. The tomb consists of a slab of alabaster mounted in gilded bronze. The frieze has allegorical representations of Generosity, by Eugenio Maccagnani, and Munificence, by Arnaldo Zocchi. The royal tombs are maintained by the National Institute of Honour Guards to the Royal Tombs, founded in 1878. They also organize picket guards at the tombs. The altar with the royal arms is by Cirilli.

The third niche holds the mortal remains – his Ossa et cineres, "Bones and ashes", as the inscription on the sarcophagus says – of the great artist Raphael. His fiancée, Maria Bibbiena is buried to the right of his sarcophagus; she died before they could marry. The sarcophagus was given by Pope Gregory XVI, and its inscription reads ILLE HIC EST RAPHAEL TIMUIT QUO SOSPITE VINCI / RERUM MAGNA PARENS ET MORIENTE MORI, meaning "Here lies Raphael, by whom the mother of all things (Nature) feared to be overcome while he was living, and while he was dying, herself to die". The epigraph was written by Pietro Bembo. The present arrangement is from 1811, designed by Antonio Munoz. The bust of Raphael (1833) is by Giuseppe Fabris. The two plaques commemorate Maria Bibbiena and Annibale Carracci. Behind the tomb is the statue known as the Madonna del Sasso (Madonna of the Rock) so named because she rests one foot on a boulder. It was commissioned by Raphael and made by Lorenzetto in 1524.

In the Chapel of the Crucifixion, the Roman brick wall is visible in the niches. The wooden crucifix on the altar is from the 15th century. On the left wall is a Descent of the Holy Ghost (1790) by Pietro Labruzi. On the right side is the low relief Cardinal Consalvi presents to Pope Pius VII the five provinces restored to the Holy See (1824) made by the Danish sculptor Bertel Thorvaldsen. The bust is a portrait of Cardinal Agostino Rivarola. The final niche on this side has a statue of St. Rasius (S. Erasio) (1727) by Francesco Moderati.[43]

Works modeled on, or inspired by, the Pantheon

As the best-preserved example of an Ancient Roman monumental building, the Pantheon has been enormously influential in Western architecture from at least the Renaissance on;[44] starting with Brunelleschi's 42-meter dome of Santa Maria del Fiore in Florence, completed in 1436.[45] Some have gone so far as to describe the Pantheon's form as "perhaps the most influential ... in Western Europe", and it is held as a "symbol of the highest architectural excellence".[8] The style of the Pantheon can be detected in many buildings of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries; numerous city halls, universities, and public libraries echo its portico-and-dome structure.

Notes

  1. ^ Rarely Pantheum. This appears in Pliny's Natural History (XXXVI.38) in describing this edifice: Agrippae Pantheum decoravit Diogenes Atheniensis; in columnis templi eius Caryatides probantur inter pauca operum, sicut in fastigio posita signa, sed propter altitudinem loci minus celebrata.

Footnotes

  1. ^ a b "Pantheon", Oxford English Dictionary, Oxford, England: Oxford University Press, revised December 2008 
  2. ^ MacDonald 1976, p. 9
  3. ^ Cassius Dio, Historiae Romanae 53.27, referenced in MacDonald 1976, p. 76
  4. ^ Moore, David (1999). "The Pantheon". romanconcrete.com. http://www.romanconcrete.com/docs/chapt01/chapt01.htm. Retrieved September 26, 2011. 
  5. ^ Rasch 1985, p. 119
  6. ^ a b MacDonald 1976, p. 18
  7. ^ a b Wilson-Jones 2003, The Enigma of the Pantheon: The Interior, pp. 179–182
  8. ^ a b Thomas 1997, pp. 163–165
  9. ^ Loewenstein 1973, pp. 247; 266
  10. ^ Favro 2005, pp. 256–257
  11. ^ Thomas 1997, p. 165
  12. ^ a b Ramage & Ramage 2009, p. 236
  13. ^ Thomas 1997, p. 166
  14. ^ Ramage & Ramage 2009, pp. 235–236
  15. ^ Thomas 1997, pp. 167–169
  16. ^ Kleiner 2007, p. 182
  17. ^ a b Hetland 2007
  18. ^ John the Deacon, Monumenta Germaniae Historia (1848) 7.8.20, quoted in MacDonald 1976, p. 139
  19. ^ Mormando, Franco (2011). Bernini: His Life and His Rome. University of Chicago Press.. ISBN 0226538516. http://books.google.co.uk/books?id=oeJ0qXzP9HsC&lpg=PT148&ots=62bzXwxVSR&dq=bernini%20pantheon%20ass&pg=PT148#v=onepage&q=bernini%20pantheon%20ass&f=false. Retrieved Jan 3, 2012. 
  20. ^ DuTemple, Leslie A. (2003). The Pantheon. Minneapolis: Lerner Publns.. p. 64. http://books.google.com/books?id=I319kQzBkGcC&lpg=PA63&dq=bernini%20pantheon%20towers&pg=PA64#v=onepage&q&f=false. Retrieved May 8, 2011. 
  21. ^ Marder 1991, p. 275
  22. ^ Another view of the interior by Panini (1735), Liechenstein Museum, Vienna
  23. ^ Pantheon, The ruins and excavations of ancient Rome, Rodolpho Lanciani, archived from the original on 2007-07-01, http://web.archive.org/web/20070701023945/http://gnv.fdt.net/~aabbeama/Christmas/Pantheon.html 
  24. ^ MacDonald 1976, pp. 63, 141–2; Claridge 1998, p. 203
  25. ^ Wilson-Jones 2003, The Enigma of the Pantheon: The Exterior, pp. 199–210
  26. ^ Wilson-Jones 2003, The Enigma of the Pantheon: The Exterior, pp. 199–206
  27. ^ Parker, Freda, The Pantheon – Rome – 126 AD, Monolithic, http://www.monolithic.com/stories/the-pantheon-rome-126-ad, retrieved 2009-07-08 
  28. ^ Wilson-Jones 2003, The Enigma of the Pantheon: The Exterior, pp. 206–212
  29. ^ Wilson-Jones 2003, The Enigma of the Pantheon: The Exterior, pp. 206–207
  30. ^ Claridge 1998, p. 204
  31. ^ Cowan 1977, p. 56
  32. ^ Mark & Hutchinson 1986
  33. ^ Moore, David, "The Pantheon", http://www.romanconcrete.com/docs/chapt01/chapt01.htm, 1999
  34. ^ MacDonald 1976, p. 33 "There are openings in it [the rotunda] here and there, at various levels, that give on to some of the many different chambers that honeycomb the rotunda structure, a honeycombing that is an integral part of a sophisticated engineering solution..."
  35. ^ a b Roth 1992, p. 36
  36. ^ Claridge 1998, pp. 204–5
  37. ^ Lancaster 2005, pp. 44–46
  38. ^ MacDonald 1976, p. 34, Wilson-Jones 2000, p. 191
  39. ^ Wilson-Jones 2003, The Enigma of the Pantheon: The Interior, pp. 182–184
  40. ^ Lancaster 2005, p. 46
  41. ^ Wilson-Jones 2003, The Enigma of the Pantheon: The Interior, pp. 182–183.
  42. ^ Wilson-Jones 2003, The Enigma of the Pantheon: The Interior, pp. 184–197
  43. ^ a b Marder 1980, p. 35
  44. ^ MacDonald 1976, pp. 94–132
  45. ^ Ross 2000

See also

References

  • Claridge, Amanda (1998), Rome, Oxford Archaeological Guides, Oxford Oxfordshire: Oxford University Press, ISBN 0192880039 
  • Cowan, Henry (1977), The Master Builders: : A History of Structural and Environmental Design From Ancient Egypt to the Nineteenth Century, New York: John Wiley and Sons, ISBN 0471027405 
  • Favro, Diane (2005), "Making Rome a World City", The Cambridge Companion to the Age of Augustus, Cambridge University Press, pp. 234–263, ISBN 978-0-521-00393-3 
  • Hetland, L. M. (2007), "Dating the Pantheon", Journal of Roman Archaeology 20 (1): 95–112, ISSN 1047-7594 
  • King, Ross (2000), Brunelleschi's Dome, London: Chatto & Windus, ISBN 0701169036 
  • Kleiner, Fred S. (2007), A History of Roman Art, Belmont: Wadsworth Publishing, ISBN 0534638465 
  • Lancaster, Lynne C. (2005), Concrete Vaulted Construction in Imperial Rome: Innovations in Context, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, ISBN 0521842026 
  • Loewenstein, Karl (1973), The Governance of Rome, The Hague, Netherlands: Martinus Nijhof, ISBN 9789024714582 
  • MacDonald, William L. (1976), The Pantheon: Design, Meaning, and Progeny, Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, ISBN 0674653459 
  • Marder, Tod A. (1980), "Specchi's High Altar for the Pantheon and the Statues by Cametti and Moderati", The Burlington Magazine (The Burlington Magazine Publications, Ltd.) 122 (922): 30–40, JSTOR 879867 
  • Marder, Tod A. (1991), "Alexander VII, Bernini, and the Urban Setting of the Pantheon in the Seventeenth Century", The Journal of the Society of Architectural Historians (Society of Architectural Historians) 50 (3): 273–292, doi:10.2307/990615, JSTOR 990615 
  • Mark, R.; Hutchinson, P. (1986), "On the structure of the Pantheon", Art Bulletin (College Art Association) 68 (1): 24–34, doi:10.2307/3050861, JSTOR 3050861 
  • Ramage, Nancy H.; Ramage, Andrew (2009), Roman art : Romulus to Constantine (5th ed.), Upper Saddle River, N.J.: Pearson Prentice Hall, ISBN 9780136000976 
  • Rasch, Jürgen (1985), "Die Kuppel in der römischen Architektur. Entwicklung, Formgebung, Konstruktion, Architectura", Architectura 15: 117–139 
  • Roth, Leland M. (1992), Understanding Architecture: Its Elements, History, And Meaning, Boulder: Westview Press, ISBN 0064384934 
  • Thomas, Edmund (1997), "The Architectural History of the Pantheon from Agrippa to Septimius Severus via Hadrian", Hephaistos 15: 163–186 
  • Wilson-Jones, Mark (2003), Principles of Roman Architecture, New Haven: Yale University Press, ISBN 030010202X 

External links